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Deterministic Python project context bundling for humans, automation, and AI

Project description

🧳 pybundle

pybundle is a deterministic, automation-friendly tool for collecting Python project context into a single, shareable bundle - ideal for debugging, audits, AI assistance, CI artifacts, or handoff between engineers.

It produces machine-readable outputs first, with optional human-readable summaries layered on top.

Think “git archive + diagnostics + metadata”, without guessing or heuristics.

Note: The PyPI package name is gwc-pybundle, but the tool is installed and used as pybundle.


🧠 Why pybundle exists

Modern software development compresses what used to be entire teams into a single role.

Today, one developer is often responsible for:

  • application code
  • build systems
  • test tooling
  • deployment logic
  • CI/CD behavior
  • environment differences
  • security implications
  • and increasingly, AI-assisted workflows

The problem is no longer how to write code.

It’s answering:

“Why is this system behaving the way it is?”

That question is hard to answer when:

  • context is scattered
  • tooling output is ephemeral
  • environment details are lost
  • source snapshots are incomplete or noisy

AI didn’t create this problem - it exposed it.

Large language models don’t fail because they lack intelligence. They fail because we give them uncurated context.

Humans don’t fail because they can’t debug. They fail because the cost of reconstructing context exceeds the time they have.

pybundle exists to reduce context debt.

It captures what matters, ignores what doesn’t, and produces a deterministic artifact that explains:

  • what code exists
  • what tools ran
  • what environment was used
  • and why the outputs exist

For humans, automation, and AI alike.


✨ Features

  • 📦 Single archive output (.zip or .tar.gz)
  • 🧠 Machine-readable manifest (MANIFEST.json) for automation
  • 🧾 Structured summaries (SUMMARY.json)
  • 🧭 Respects .gitignore exactly when available
  • 🛑 Safely ignores virtualenvs and caches (even with non-standard names)
  • 🔍 Optional tooling checks (ruff, mypy, pytest, ripgrep scans)
  • 🧪 Deterministic output (stable paths, timestamps, schemas)
  • 🔒 Secret-safe (optional redaction)

📂 What’s in a pybundle archive?

At minimum, a bundle contains:

MANIFEST.json        # stable, machine-readable metadata
SUMMARY.json         # structured summary of collected data
src/                 # filtered project source snapshot
logs/                # tool outputs (ruff, mypy, etc.)
meta/                # environment + tool detection

MANIFEST.json (automation fuel)

Includes:

  • tool paths detected
  • options used
  • archive name + format
  • git commit hash (if available)
  • UTC timestamp
  • schema version (stable)

Another script can fully understand a bundle without reading markdown.


🚀 Installation

We recommend using a Python virtual environment for development tooling.

Quick installation (pybundle tooling) - RECOMMENDED

Create a dedicated requirements file in the root of your project:

# requirements-pybundle.txt
ruff
mypy
pytest
gwc-pybundle==0.4.3

Then install:

pip install -r requirements-pybundle.txt

System dependency: pybundle uses ripgrep (rg) for source scanning and expects the system binary.

  • macOS: brew install ripgrep
  • Ubuntu/Debian: sudo apt install ripgrep
  • Fedora: sudo dnf install ripgrep

After installation, run:

pybundle run analysis

A new artifacts/ directory will be created containing:

  • the compressed bundle
  • an extracted working directory
  • machine-readable metadata (MANIFEST.json, SUMMARY.json)

See Usage for more details.


Advanced installation

From GitHub

pip install "gwc-pybundle @ git+https://github.com/girls-whocode/pybundle.git@v0.4.3"

Pinning to a tag ensures reproducible behavior.

Editable install (for development)

pip install -e .

🧪 Usage

From the root of a Python project, run a profile using the run command:

pybundle run analysis

This builds a timestamped diagnostic bundle under the default artifacts/ directory.

Profiles

Profiles define what pybundle collects and which tools are run.

Available profiles include:

  • analysis - full diagnostics (lint, type-check, tests, scans)
  • debug - analysis + additional environment validation
  • backup - minimal environment snapshot
  • ai - AI-optimized context bundle (lean, source-first)

To list all available profiles:

pybundle list-profiles

Profiles are always invoked via:

pybundle run <profile>

🤖 AI profile (NEW)

The ai profile is optimized for handing a project to AI tooling (ChatGPT, local LLMs, code assistants, etc.).

It prioritizes source code and reproducible context, while skipping expensive or noisy steps by default.

Run it with:

pybundle run ai

What ai does by default

  • ✅ Includes full curated source snapshot (src/)
  • ✅ Includes environment + git metadata
  • ✅ Generates REPRO.md and HANDOFF.md
  • ❌ Skips linting, type-checking, tests
  • ❌ Skips ripgrep scans and error-context expansion
  • ❌ Skips compileall unless explicitly enabled

The result is a small, fast, AI-friendly bundle that still preserves determinism and traceability.

You may selectively re-enable tools:

pybundle run ai --ruff --mypy
pybundle run ai --compileall

This makes ai suitable for:

  • AI-assisted refactoring
  • Large-context summarization
  • Code review handoff
  • Offline or local LLM workflows

Common options

Most usage customizations are done through flags on pybundle run.

Example:

pybundle run analysis \
  --format zip \
  --outdir ./artifacts \
  --name myproject-bundle \
  --strict

Commonly used options:

  • --format {auto,zip,tar.gz} - archive format
  • --outdir PATH - output directory (default: <project>/artifacts)
  • --name NAME - override archive name prefix
  • --strict - fail with non-zero exit code if any step fails
  • --no-spinner - disable spinner output (CI-friendly)
  • --redact / --no-redact - control secret redaction

Tool execution can be selectively disabled:

--no-ruff
--no-mypy
--no-pytest
--no-rg
--no-error-refs
--no-context

For the full list of options:

pybundle run --help

Doctor mode

To see which tools are available and what would run (without creating a bundle):

pybundle doctor

You may optionally specify a profile to preview:

pybundle doctor analysis

This is useful for validating environment readiness (CI, fresh machines, etc.).


Version

To check the installed version:

pybundle version

🧠 Ignore behavior (important)

If inside a Git repository

pybundle uses Git itself to determine which files are included:

  • .gitignore
  • .git/info/exclude
  • global gitignore rules

This guarantees pybundle sees the project exactly as Git does.

If Git is unavailable

pybundle falls back to safe structural rules:

  • ignores __pycache__, .ruff_cache, .mypy_cache, .pytest_cache, etc.
  • detects virtual environments by structure (pyvenv.cfg, bin/activate), not by name → works with .venv, .pybundle-venv, env-prod-2025, etc.

No filename guessing. No surprises.


📜 Profiles

pybundle is profile-driven. Each profile defines:

  • what files are collected
  • which tools run
  • what metadata is emitted

Example profiles:

  • analysis
  • source
  • minimal

Profiles are extensible - add your own without modifying core logic.


🔐 Safety & Redaction

By default, pybundle:

  • avoids scanning known secret locations
  • supports optional redaction of sensitive strings in logs

Use --redact / --no-redact to control behavior.


🧩 Why pybundle?

pybundle is designed for:

  • handing a project to another engineer
  • attaching context to a bug report
  • feeding a codebase to AI tooling
  • generating CI artifacts
  • preserving “what exactly did we run?”
  • producing AI-consumable project context without guesswork

It prioritizes determinism, traceability, and automation over clever heuristics.


🛠 Development Notes

  • Python ≥ 3.9
  • Uses modern tooling (ruff, mypy)
  • Fully type-checked
  • Formatter-clean
  • No test suite yet (intentional; coming later)

During development, run:

python -m pybundle ...

to bypass shell caching.


📌 Versioning

pybundle follows Semantic Versioning.

Pinned Git tags are recommended when used as a dependency:

gwc-pybundle @ git+https://github.com/girls-whocode/pybundle.git@v0.4.3

🧠 Philosophy

If a tool produces output, it should also produce metadata about how and why that output exists.

pybundle treats context as a first-class artifact.


📦 Package naming note

The distribution name on PyPI is gwc-pybundle to avoid conflicts with existing packages.

The project name, imports, and CLI remain pybundle.

pip install gwc-pybundle
pybundle run analysis

Look in the autocreated artifacts/ folder

📄 License

MIT License

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